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Rowena Dring. (Reviews: New York).


ELIZABETH DEE GALLERY

The painting craze of the past five years or so has found many young artists juxtaposing modes of representation previously considered incompatible. Using high-end enamel or acrylic paints to erase the expressive mark of the painter, artists like Ingrid Calame, Inka Essenhigh Inka Essenhigh (b.1969 Belfonte, Pennsylvania) is a painter based in New York.

Essenhigh studied at the Columbus College of Art and Design in Ohio (1991) and the School of Visual Arts in New York (1993).
, Monique Prieto, and Jay Davis Jay Davis is an American actor, stand-up comedian and comedy promoter/producer who garnered nationwide attention after appearing in Dane Cook's Tourgasm, a 30-day cross-country-tour-turned-reality-show which also included Cook, Gary Gulman and Robert Kelly, and was given a  merge abstraction and representation, using Pop art--specifically, its technique of mining the media for photographic imagery--as a template for banishing the restrictions that used to keep the two segregated.

At first glance--and almost always when reproduced in photographs--British artist Rowena Dring's work seems to fit this mold. Starting with images of landscapes taken from travel brochures or photographs snapped by the artist during her own journeys, Dring transforms these scenes into basic, fragmentary visual data in large pictures. Their splintery passages of flat color look like blown-up versions of those in paint-by-numbers sets. Seeing the works up close, however, one realizes that there is a substantial difference between Dring and most painters--or any other painter, for that matter. Her works are made with monochromatic monochromatic /mono·chro·mat·ic/ (-kro-mat´ik)
1. existing in or having only one color.

2. pertaining to or affected by monochromatic vision.

3. staining with only one dye at a time.
 pieces of quilting quilting, form of needlework, almost always created by women, most of them anonymous, in which two layers of fabric on either side of an interlining (batting) are sewn together, usually with a pattern of back or running (quilting) stitches that hold the layers  fabric, which she carefully stitches together before stretching over a frame. A close look at the works reveals the thick black thread binding the color swatches. When one steps back, the colors snap together into a cohesive, quasi-representational image--as happens with the brushwork brush·work  
n.
1. Work done with a brush.

2. The manner in which a painter applies paint with a brush.


brushwork
Noun
 in a Seurat or a Frans Hals.

Works like Untitled (Water) and Tall Trees (all works 2002) are fairly generic compositions--archetypal nature scenes we've seen thousands of times in paintings and photographs. Untitled (Stream) moves to monumental scale, describing in minute detail the movements of water and reflections of light while sticking to Dring's "system," which evokes comic strips in its eschewal of chiaroscuro chiaroscuro (kyärōsk`rō) [Ital.,=light and dark], term once applied to an early method of printing woodcuts from several blocks and also to works in black and white or monotone.  and modeling. Two works that reached beyond the common landscape were Camouflage for In-Between the Trees and Camouflage for a Sunny Spot in the Grass, which linked the patterning of nature and camouflage with the artist's own use of flat color. The camouflage theme calls to mind not only military concealment but the artists (most notably Warhol) and fashion designers who've used it to completely opposite effect.

Dring also summons the complicated history of textile-based art: the traditions of weaving, tapestry, and quilting, which have been assigned a higher aesthetic value in other cultures. In the West textiles have always been seen as inferior to painting, mostly, as feminists have pointed Out, because activities like sewing and weaving Sewing and Weaving
Arachne

skilled weaver; changed into spider for challenging Athena to weaving contest. [Gk. Myth.: Zimmerman, 27]

Athena

goddess of spinning and weaving. [Gk. Myth.
 have been generally viewed as women's work. (Even in the supposedly egalitarian cosmos of Bauhaus modernism, Anni Albers's textiles took a serious backseat to her husband's obsessions with rectilinear rec·ti·lin·e·ar  
adj.
Moving in, consisting of, bounded by, or characterized by a straight line or lines: following a rectilinear path; rectilinear patterns in wallpaper.
 painting.) By stitching together the worlds of textile and painting, Dring cleverly forces fabric into the realm of "high art" and dares us to think otherwise. Playing with visual associations ranging from paint-by-numbers, cartoons, and camouflage to traditional painting, she collapses form and subject matter, canvas and textile, and trumps the contentious realms of representation labeled by such terms as figuration fig·u·ra·tion  
n.
1. The act of forming something into a particular shape.

2. A shape, form, or outline.

3. The act of representing with figures.

4. A figurative representation.

5.
, abstraction, pattern, and decoration.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Schwendener, Martha
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Dec 1, 2002
Words:496
Previous Article:Edwin Dickinson. (Reviews: New York).
Next Article:Thomas Scheibitz. (Reviews: New York).
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